Lloyd
A Merriman was born on August 2, 1924 in
Clovis, California. He played baseball and football at Clovis
High School and graduated in June 1942.

During the summer he enrolled at
Stanford University, completing his freshman year in 1942-43, and he
made the football team that fall. “I started in the summer of 1942,”
Lloyd recalled in a 2003 article. “I knew I wouldn’t be there very
long, because World War II was going on. After my freshman year, I
joined the service.

“I went into the service in
1943, and I played a couple years of football in the service. What I
did was enlist in the Marine Corps in November of 1942, and they let
me finish the school year. In the meantime, I put in for what they
used to call V-5, the Naval Flight Program. I got accepted into
that.

“In June of 1943 I got called
in. Then I had to resign from the Marine Corps and go into the Navy.
So I got my training in the Navy for about two years. I graduated
from flight training at Corpus Christi, Texas, and I went back into
the Marine Corps in July 1945.”

“In 1944 I was in Pre-Flight
Training and played football at Norman, Oklahoma. We had a fun team.
We had old chiefs and young enlisted guys, some of them in flight
training. One fella was only eighteen years old, Emil Sitko. He was
a halfback. Later, he became an All-American for two years at Notre
Dame, and he played two or three seasons of pro football. Another
fella who played for us was Len Eshmont. After the war, he played
for the Forty-Niners, and they have that Eshmont Award named after
him.

“In 1945 I ended up near Miami
at a base called Opa-Locka. By then the war was over, and I was in
the Marine Corps. The Naval Training Station there had a football
schedule. That team disbanded. So we went over and picked up their
uniforms and played out their schedule. We had a lot of fun. We just
grabbed whoever wanted to play and made a team out of it. We had
Marines and a mixture of servicemen on that team, and we played
other service teams.

Lieutenant (jg) Merriman had a
total of 10 flying hours on a North American SNJ
trainer and got out
of the service in December 1945. He went back to Stanford for the
winter and played baseball in the spring of 1946 and football that
fall.

Despite numerous offers and
being the Chicago Cardinals’ (NFL) number three draft pick in 1947,
Merriman chose not to play professional football.

“I signed a contract with the
Cincinnati Reds after we finished Stanford's baseball season, so I
never played football after that. They gave me a bonus of $12,000. I
started playing minor league ball in 1948, but I would go back to
Stanford in the off-season. I would take classes in the winter
quarter, and that’s how I graduated in 1949.”

In 1948 the Reds sent Merriman
to Columbia in the South Atlantic League. With sixth place Columbia,
Merriman hit .298 and led the league in runs scored with 120,
triples with 18, and stolen bases with 44. He made the league’s
All-Star team as an outfielder.

He made his major league debut
with Cincinnati in 1949, appearing in 103 games and batting .230. He
remained with the Reds in 1950 and 1951, but was recalled to
military service in 1952 because of the Korean War.

“The Marines called me up in May
1952. I hadn’t been near an airplane in five years. I had 10 hours
in on what they called an SNJ, a practice plane. They sent us to the
Marine base in El Toro, California, and told us to learn how to fly
a jet.

“Flying a jet was quite a
thrill. The jets were single-seated. You weren’t riding with
anybody. You get the groundwork, and you go to takeoff. The funny
thing is how you hear all this sound going down the runway, but
about 300 feet after takeoff, all the sound goes away! You think
maybe that jet has quit on you, but what happens is that you’ve left
the sound behind you.

“I met Ted Williams at El Toro,
and John Glenn was in our group too. Ted and John both flew jets in
Korea. We trained there, and then we trained near Honolulu in
Hawaii. We returned and left from the States for Korea around
January 1953.”

“I spent about eight months in
Korea in the First Marine Air Wing, so I got in on the tail end of
the war. I flew 87 combat missions in an [Grumman] F9F Panther Jet.
I saw quite a bit of Jerry Coleman, the Yankee second baseman. Jerry
was a Marine pilot who flew a Corsair.”

After receiving his discharge in
September 1953, Merriman played winter baseball in Havana, Cuba. In
February 1955, he was purchased by the Chicago White Sox and played
just one game before being purchased by the Chicago Cubs in April.
Merriman played 72 games and batted .214 before retiring from
professional baseball.

Starting in 1956, Merriman
opened his own insurance agency which he operated for 15 years. He
then started raising, training, and showing horses in California,
and created a horse vitamin supplement.

In 1993 Clovis High School
recognized his achievements by renaming the school’s varsity diamond
“Lloyd Merriman Field.” The organizers brought in several of the
former player’s friends, made a presentation, and Merriman threw out
the first pitch.

Lloyd Merriman, an inductee of
the Stanford Athletic Hall of Fame, passed away in Fresno,
California on January 20, 2004. He was 79.